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Europe | Monetary Policy & Inflation | Rates
Europe | Monetary Policy & Inflation | Rates
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Go to: Recent Voter Comments ǀ Stress, Surveys and Data
Link to Most Recent ECB Meeting Minutes (Dec 22)
The ECB hiked hawkishly in February. The market badly misread the outcome, pricing dovishness, which we saw strong value in fading. This has now largely occurred. I have long been hawkish the ECB, and my target terminal rate since the start of the year has been >3.5%. The market is now fully pricing the lower end of this trajectory: roughly 50bp in March, 25bp in May and 25bp in June. I expect the ECB will need to hike beyond there, with 50bp in May my expectation (terminal rate >3.75%), but we may need to wait for the data before the next leg higher in pricing (Chart 2).
ECB speakers have struck a strongly hawkish line since the February meeting, doubling down on Lagarde’s ‘forward guidance/not forward guidance’ of ‘staying the course’. My updated hawkometer and summary of ECB speaker comments reflects this (Chart 1 and appendix).
The likes of Vice President de Guindos (neutral), Latvia’s Kazāks (hawk) and Croatia’s Vujčić (hawk) are all already discussing prospects for hiking in May, while the Netherlands’ Knot (hawk), Belgium’s Wunsch (hawk), Lithuania’s Šimkus (neutral/hawk) and Slovakia’s Kažimír (hawk) have highlighted the explicit prospect of 50bp. I lean towards the hawks’ expectation for several reasons (discussed below), but the market is unlikely to price as much until we have seen the final January CPI reading (23 February).
Why 50bp in May?
Our expectation for sustained hawkishness is supported by survey and financial condition data (see Appendix). ECB measures of systemic stress continue to decline despite recent sell-offs in periphery and core bonds. Meanwhile, European economic surprises have continued to diverge positively from China and the US, while surveys across businesses and consumers in activity and employment show increasing signs of recovery. Meanwhile, inflation expectations continue to rise, with clear signs of medium-term de-anchoring versus historic trend.
As a result, while the case for dovishness could build if inflation began to slip, consensus within the voting members should begin to turn towards the deterioration of the medium-term outlook.
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